Below are all the artists and their artworks that have been in the Curious Sound Objects art shows. What a pleasure to be in your company.

BANU MUSA MUSIC BOX - Aisha Jandosova

Vitruvian Thing No.1 - Mitch Shiles

Terror Management - Pascal Petzinger

The "talking heads" in the media are talking to you for 24 hours per day. Those faces that talk all day to you. The world has become small in nearly a hundred years. From everywhere there is information coming at you and the psyche of the human is not (yet) adapted to all of this. If you don’t watch out, you take in so many stimulae that you can become numbed. For this way of information processing and exclusion by humans, the term Terror Management can be used.

The installation Terror Management has become an installation where the artists’ interpretation on his media experience is shown. You see talking faces off of the television, from the news, opinion programs and talkshows. There are images from the war on Iraq, but also pulp shows. Like you are zapping along the programs on the television. The images and sounds are treated in a way so that they become a distorted mash. The more words these talking heads tell you or the louder they talk, the more they distort their own sound and image.

The work is built up as a closed system, a system where the end result is dependent on every link in the chain. The image of mixed faces is beamed on a reflective foil which is hanging in a white frame on eye height. Suspended behind the foil is a speaker which puts out the voices of the faces to be seen. The foil reflects the final distorted video image on the wall opposite to the frame.

Skull Whispering - Don Blair & Sands Fish

Coasts - W. Benjamin Bray

Drumtop - Akito van Troyer

Slow - Zach Katz

Strange Attractor - Chris Chronopoulos

Tension - Michael Degen & Jason Tucker

Weaving Light - Josh Vekhter

Imperfect Tense - Michael Dewberry

—Imperfect Tense is the latest and smallest in a series of augmented/functional tensegrity sculptures by Michael Dewberry. A tetrahedron of stainless steel rods and piano wire floats over hidden contact microphones and effects processors, inviting gallery visitors to play with a range of ethereal and percussive sounds.

It was a light and elegant piece over a large oblong platform lit from above. As such, the piece commanded an almost ritualistic approach. Visitors would advance toward the piece slowly, then caution would turn to smiles as they coaxed sound of out of the piece. It was particularly fun to see several people play it simultaneously.

Slink - Jeff Lieberman

Slink is a vertically oscillating spring backed by a strobing array that is faster than the eye can perceive. The spring appears to freeze in time and space into a sine wave. Periodically it can appear to be split in the middle, or phase horizontally.

Little Dripper - Jeff Lieberman & Giles Hall

Little Dripper, a work in the tradition of Harold Edgerton, is a water fountain where individual droplets of water appear to freeze and undulate in the air. This piece exhibited what appeared to be the slowing, freezing, and reversal of time, and also invited viewers to place their hands in the path of the drops. At times, the drops appeared to come out of a participant's fingers and flow back into the pump.

Experiencing both pieces brought Clarke's third law to mind, as the technology was indistinguishable from magic. The eye saw one thing, as the mind wondered, "but how?"

Future Earth Sounds - Jason Livingston

Jason Livingston's piece was one of the more humorous in the show – he built a miniature atomic bomb that housed a Twinkie and a cricket. A tiny viewport with a magnifying lamp along with a stethoscope allowed a peek and listen into a post apocalyptic future.

Color Choir Cube - Morgan Packard

From Morgan – "The physical environment isn't the container for social interaction it once was. People at bars don't strike up conversations with strangers, they stare at their phones... The world inside the gadgets is becoming as big and important to them as the physical world.

The ColorChoir project is an attempt to transform the role of the mobile phone from something that fractures real-world physical spaces to one that creates them. It does this by turning phones into voices in a unified choir, controlled by a single conductor. When several phones' browser apps are connected to ColorChoir, each device plays back part of an evolving, rhythmic, musical composition, by way of a web based synthesizer. The sound from one device combines with the sound from another, bringing everyone nearby into a shared physical space.

For the Curious Sound Objects show, I built a controller for the ColorChoir conductor system, a single, large, padded, featureless orange cube. An accelerometer inside the cube detects rotational orientation. Holding the cube in different ways changes the music played from each of the phones. The choice of a large, featureless object to act as a controller for a computer music performance is deliberate, and also serves the goal of bringing people together in to the same space. I didn't want to offer small, detailed controls that require focus, concentration, delicate and precise movements, taking participants' attention away from the people around them. I wanted to encourage simple, easy, large, expressive, even goofy movements."

Alan Argondizza - Lock Eyes

Lock Eyes is an artwork that traps the gaze of the participant. When you look into the eye, ominous rhythmic and droning music emanates from within. As you pull your face closer, the sounds intensify and you feel the reverberations; the eyeball is locked comfortably in your hands.

Happy-O-Meter - Carly Nix & Zach Katz

This work by Carly Nix and Zachary Katz presented small teddy bears suspended in jars of jello (brains!) that make rhythmic sounds when pressed. Multiple viewers can play multiple bears simultaneously for a sort of teddy bear jam.

Listen to Us - Andy Stuhl

Marcel Duchamp claimed, “One can look at seeing, one can’t hear hearing.” Drawing on the work of other sound artists, “Listen to Us” counters Duchamp’s fiction with its own fiction: that hearing can be split, shared, resonated and amplified to the point where we can no longer hear anything outside of each other’s hearing.

“Listen to Us” consists of a pair of headphones which has been split in half. Each half has had a tiny microphone inserted into it, pointing into the listener’s ear. Between the two earpieces, a hidden computer and audio interface begin the performance by sending impulse sounds into the listeners’ ears. The reverberations of these sounds are picked up by each microphone and passed as impulse into the other participant’s ear. The cycle repeats itself rapidly (in a sped up version of Alvin Lucier’s “I Am Sitting in a Room”) until the sounds have become distorted by the properties of the listeners’ ears. The space that is sonically realized is a merging of these two ears, and the sound, we can claim, is the sum of the distortions at play anytime the two participants listen to one another.

Besides the two participants, another person or group can listen in on the sounds as they take shape by simply plugging another set of earphones or loudspeakers into the interface. The participants then become a spectacle, hearing each other’s ears as the sound of their hearing-together is revealed to the observers.

Methuselah's Muse - Chris Chronopoulos

Methuselah's Muse by Chris Chonopoulos is an experiment in generative music using cellular automata. A 4-foot monolithic pillar is crowned by a grid of backlit buttons. The grid is running an interactive Game of Life simulation with birth, death, and input events triggering various audio samples. A single cell dies from isolation, so for slow input the grid appears as a simple 2D keyboard. But faster input or polyphony cause neighboring cells to interact and evolve, leading to emergent phenomena like gliders, oscillators, and methuselahs - each with their own unique musical signature. The resulting chorus is surprising yet tractable, an abstract soundtrack to our own ongoing story of emergence.